Boston Herald

Washington mining region struggles

Biggest employer closing up shop

-

METALINE FALLS, Wash. — Times are tough in a rural county in northeast Washington state because one of the region’s biggest employers is shutting down.

The Pend Oreille Mine, just north of Metaline Falls, closed on July 31, at a cost of about 200 family wage jobs in an area of less than 1,000 residents.

It’s another sign of the imbalance of prosperity in Washington state. While the Seattle area gorges on highpaying jobs, many rural counties like Pend Oreille County that depend on natural resource industries — logging, fishing, mining — are suffering.

This divide is part of a national trend. People in urban areas had higher percapita income, lower poverty rates, lower unemployme­nt rates and higher education levels than people in rural areas in recent years, according to data from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e. Rural areas are also suffering a declining population, while urban areas grow, the USDA said.

Pend Oreille County Commission­er Steve Kiss said the loss of about 200 jobs at the lead and zinc mine hurts. About 40 employees will remain for long-term maintenanc­e. “The mine was the last operating natural resourceba­sed industry in the northern part of the county, with the exception of two hydroelect­ric facilities,” Kiss said. “In the past we have lost other mines, sawmills, a cement plant and the railroad that served all these industries.”

Small businesses struggle to survive in the area in the best of times, Kiss said. “Our two grocery stores, a few restaurant­s and bars and two gas stations/convenienc­e stores will definitely see a reduction in sales,” he said, while local government­s will see less tax revenue.

The owners of the Pend Oreille Mine said the closure was prompted by slumping demand for zinc and the prohibitiv­e cost of exploring for new deposits.

Not all the economic news from the county is bad.

In April, the Kalispel Tribe of Indians opened a new casino near Cusick that is part of a $10 million project that includes an RV park, storage facility, gas station and grocery store. In total, they will create about 80 new jobs.

“I fully understand the resiliency of the people who live here,” Kiss added. “We will survive.”

 ?? AP ?? DWINDLING RESOURCES: The Pend Oreille Mine in Metaline Falls, Wash., closed recently, at a cost of about 200 jobs in an area of less than 1,000 residents.
AP DWINDLING RESOURCES: The Pend Oreille Mine in Metaline Falls, Wash., closed recently, at a cost of about 200 jobs in an area of less than 1,000 residents.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States